Gigascale Capital founder and former Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ:META) CTO Mike Schroepfer said industrial robotics will scale faster than consumer robots designed for homes, citing the complexity and safety risks of household environments.
Industrial Robotics To Lead Growth
Speaking on the All-In Podcast on Monday, Schroepfer said factories and warehouses offer more controlled conditions than homes, allowing faster deployment of robotics systems. He said tasks such as packaging, sorting and unboxing are early targets for robotics expansion in logistics and manufacturing.
"You're playing on hard mode to start in the home," he said, citing unpredictable variables such as pets, spills and fragile objects that slow consumer robotics adoption.
He added that restructured factory workflows built around robotics could generate “5x to 10x” productivity gains in repetitive tasks.
Investment Shift
Schroepfer described a broader economic shift from software-driven growth to physical-world constraints. "The marginal cost of software went to zero. The thing that really mattered is how much stuff can we build," he said, outlining the investment thesis behind Gigascale Capital, which manages roughly $250 million.
Warehouse Automation Gains Traction
Meta’s first ‘Senior Fellow’ said robots are already widely used in highly structured environments such as automotive manufacturing. He said the next wave of gains is expected in warehouse and logistics operations, where tasks remain partially manual and repetitive.
He pointed to unboxing, packaging and material handling as early automation targets in logistics operations.
Last year, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) also introduced its Vulcan warehouse robot, which can handle about 75% of items in fulfillment centers using tactile sensing, highlighting how large-scale logistics operators are expanding automation in real-world warehouse environments.
Infrastructure Constraints Drive Thesis
Schroepfer said startups are increasingly focused on physical infrastructure, including grid power systems, nuclear microreactors and long-duration energy storage.
He cited companies such as Heron Power, Radiant Nuclear and Form Energy as examples of technologies supporting rising demand for compute, manufacturing capacity and industrial scale-up.
Schroepfer, a 25-year Silicon Valley veteran, said improved AI tooling and smaller teams are accelerating development cycles across robotics and industrial systems.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk in 2024 said he expects humanoid robots to see broad household adoption within years, reflecting rising expectations for consumer robotics.
In March, investor Mark Cuban said homes may eventually be redesigned around non-humanoid robots such as task-specific systems, suggesting a shift away from human-like designs in consumer robotics.
Photo courtesy: Stock-Asso / Shutterstock
Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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